L
Lokabrenna
Guest
Awww, thank you! I’m trying my best to answer questions.First of all, thank you, Loka, for being such a pleasant, patient, and unflappable source of knowledge about a subject many are unfamiliar with or don’t understand. Heil thu farir!
This is true, but we also obtain information from (as you mentioned) personal experience, and the experiences of the first people who worshiped those gods.
- We get our information about what gods do, specialize in, are interested in, mainly from myths.
I’m not so sure about this, some of Aphrodite’s epithets were Nikêphoros (“Bringer of Victory”), Areia (“of Ares”, “Warlike”), Hôplismenê (“Armed”), perhaps indicating that someone thought that she’d make good “backup” during a battle (Trojan War notwithstanding).
- Gods are useful/attractive to us insofar as they can help us in those areas. No one prays to Aphrodite for strength in battle, for example.
I personally think that although all war gods (assuming you can reduce all deities to one function) have a common interest (war, in this case), the people who worshiped them all thought of war in different ways. The Greeks even had two deities who embodied different aspects of war (Ares was the “war is Hell” deity, Athena was more interested in strategy and tactics).
- But all the stories conflict. Who’s in charge of what area? Are all the war gods interchangeable? If so, why specialize in only one pantheon? How do you know it’s the right one, if that question has any meaning? It all seems arbitrary, and thus cause and result (i.e. sacrifice/ritual followed by blessing) impossible to verify.
I’ve seen more of the “do the rituals and don’t worry about the Big Stuff”. The point, I think, is not “where did the gods come from?” the point is “the gods are here, they’re interacting with people”. It’s kind of like in a horror movie where no one knows anything about the monster. Some part of the film might be devoted to explaining where the monster came from, but what really matters is “the monster is here and it’s trying to eat me”.I raised these issues some years ago on a Pagan message board and nobody else seemed to think it was much of a problem, but I couldn’t make sense of it any more. Does the question of the specific nature and metaphysical reality of the gods matter at all to Pagans these days? Or do you still just go on having fun and doing rituals without bothering much about questions that probably can’t be answered anyway? I’m curious, and do not intend to be critical. Thanks.